A week ago I took the advice of those who said "don't knock it til you try it" and got a pair of AirPods Max. After a week, I am still not sure whether I will be keeping them or continue to look at alternatives. I am not going to bash these. I understand why people are attracted to them and I can see why people would love them. I also am not going to sugarcoat anything. These have some major flaws. Please understand that this is all my opinion. As someone who researches a product thoroughly before buying, I am hoping this gives others insight when they are searching for reviews.
What I like:
Sound. The sound is pretty good. I listen to a variety of music and these are really versatile. The bass is slightly exaggerated, but that helps make them versatile. I think these produce a sound that is pleasing and most people will really enjoy, including myself.
Connectivity. In general, these are excellent with connecting to Apple devices. I can go from an iPhone to a MacBook to an iPad then an Apple TV completely seamlessly. This is THE selling feature of these headphones in my opinion. This is what completely separates them from all of the alternatives. It is great.
ANC/Transparency. The ANC is right up there with the class leaders. I am not sure it is better, but it is certainly as good. Transparency on the other hand is class leading. And it is not close. The transparency mode here is fantastic and has no audible hiss when in use. If connectivity is the #1 feature, transparency is #1b.
What I don't like:
Comfort. This is the Achilles heal of the Airpods Max. I want to preface this with acknowledging that these will fit some people's heads better than others. For me, they are not great, leaning toward outright uncomfortable. The clamping force is pretty significant. I suspect this is necessary because of the weight, most of which is heavily concentrated in the earcups. The clamping force can be headache inducing made even worse when I am wearing glasses. Even with the force, the headphones feel like they want to keep sliding down due to all of the weight being in the ears. After an hour or two, I can definitely feel it in my neck. In fact, after wearing these for about an hour I can crack every bone in my neck which is admittedly pretty bad ass! They also had significant cabin pressure with ANC or transparency on. However, I did acclimate to that in a day or two and it is no longer an issue. If these are returned, it will be due to the comfort.
Battery Life. The battery life is poor in this space. Almost no one has less than 25 hours and some are pushing 35-40 hours. Bose only offers 20 hours, but they can be bought with a battery case that triples that run time. Under 20 hours is unacceptable at this price point and in this space. This is made worse by the fact that there is no power button. If I do not put them in the case, they will lose 6-8% over night. They need a power button and at least 25 hours of battery life.
Case. No need to beat this horse.
I could take it or leave it:
Controls. I appreciate buttons. So that is a plus. The buttons are not well placed, and I often hit them on accident. That's a minus. The digital crown is great for volume, and not so great for play/pause, skip. I have a hard time clicking the correct number of times.
Materials. This isn't likely to go over well, but hear me out. I appreciate that Apple was calling on all of their products and is creating a brand image. I really like that and think it is cool. However, there are two reasons I do not like the material choices. One, the aforementioned weight. Two, they don't feel $550. Don't get me wrong, they feel premium when compared to most other ANC headphones. When you compare them to other headphones in this range though, the cloth and aluminum do not measure up well to the leather and overall feel of other headphones. I find B&O's offerings to have a more premium feel. In the end, the materials chosen accentuate the idea that this is a tech company making headphones.
Looks. They look fine albeit generic. But I like the color choices and the ability to mix and match pads.
Warranty. Certainly not a dealbreaker, but I would like to see Apple match the warranty of Sennheiser (2 years) or B&O (3 years). Granted you can buy AppleCare to get it two years and cover accidental damage, but at this price point I think the warranty should be better than 1 year.
So this all leaves me conflicted. I can live with most of the things I don't like. The battery is annoying and the materials in the end are fine if not my favorite. I 100% would choose to keep the AirPods Max if they were more comfortable. I am afraid the clamping force will make them difficult to wear for long stretches. I have stretched them out and it has helped a bit, but the clamp is still there. I am not sure these will break in as well as most headphones.
I have a pair of B&O H95 coming tomorrow to compare. My inclination is that if those are comfortable, don't have too much hiss during transparency mode, and sound good, I will likely be going with those and returning the Max. My experience with the HX say the H95 will likely be plenty comfortable and will sound great. The hiss will be the dealbreaker if the H95 does not improve on the HX's performance.
Another option I am seriously considering is purchasing something like the Sony XM4's on a sale ($<280) and then getting something like the Drop HD6XX paired with a Schit modi magni stack. That would not be super far off APM with AppleCare and case and have decent on the go headphones with a kick ass setup at home.
What I like:
Sound. The sound is pretty good. I listen to a variety of music and these are really versatile. The bass is slightly exaggerated, but that helps make them versatile. I think these produce a sound that is pleasing and most people will really enjoy, including myself.
Connectivity. In general, these are excellent with connecting to Apple devices. I can go from an iPhone to a MacBook to an iPad then an Apple TV completely seamlessly. This is THE selling feature of these headphones in my opinion. This is what completely separates them from all of the alternatives. It is great.
ANC/Transparency. The ANC is right up there with the class leaders. I am not sure it is better, but it is certainly as good. Transparency on the other hand is class leading. And it is not close. The transparency mode here is fantastic and has no audible hiss when in use. If connectivity is the #1 feature, transparency is #1b.
What I don't like:
Comfort. This is the Achilles heal of the Airpods Max. I want to preface this with acknowledging that these will fit some people's heads better than others. For me, they are not great, leaning toward outright uncomfortable. The clamping force is pretty significant. I suspect this is necessary because of the weight, most of which is heavily concentrated in the earcups. The clamping force can be headache inducing made even worse when I am wearing glasses. Even with the force, the headphones feel like they want to keep sliding down due to all of the weight being in the ears. After an hour or two, I can definitely feel it in my neck. In fact, after wearing these for about an hour I can crack every bone in my neck which is admittedly pretty bad ass! They also had significant cabin pressure with ANC or transparency on. However, I did acclimate to that in a day or two and it is no longer an issue. If these are returned, it will be due to the comfort.
Battery Life. The battery life is poor in this space. Almost no one has less than 25 hours and some are pushing 35-40 hours. Bose only offers 20 hours, but they can be bought with a battery case that triples that run time. Under 20 hours is unacceptable at this price point and in this space. This is made worse by the fact that there is no power button. If I do not put them in the case, they will lose 6-8% over night. They need a power button and at least 25 hours of battery life.
Case. No need to beat this horse.
I could take it or leave it:
Controls. I appreciate buttons. So that is a plus. The buttons are not well placed, and I often hit them on accident. That's a minus. The digital crown is great for volume, and not so great for play/pause, skip. I have a hard time clicking the correct number of times.
Materials. This isn't likely to go over well, but hear me out. I appreciate that Apple was calling on all of their products and is creating a brand image. I really like that and think it is cool. However, there are two reasons I do not like the material choices. One, the aforementioned weight. Two, they don't feel $550. Don't get me wrong, they feel premium when compared to most other ANC headphones. When you compare them to other headphones in this range though, the cloth and aluminum do not measure up well to the leather and overall feel of other headphones. I find B&O's offerings to have a more premium feel. In the end, the materials chosen accentuate the idea that this is a tech company making headphones.
Looks. They look fine albeit generic. But I like the color choices and the ability to mix and match pads.
Warranty. Certainly not a dealbreaker, but I would like to see Apple match the warranty of Sennheiser (2 years) or B&O (3 years). Granted you can buy AppleCare to get it two years and cover accidental damage, but at this price point I think the warranty should be better than 1 year.
So this all leaves me conflicted. I can live with most of the things I don't like. The battery is annoying and the materials in the end are fine if not my favorite. I 100% would choose to keep the AirPods Max if they were more comfortable. I am afraid the clamping force will make them difficult to wear for long stretches. I have stretched them out and it has helped a bit, but the clamp is still there. I am not sure these will break in as well as most headphones.
I have a pair of B&O H95 coming tomorrow to compare. My inclination is that if those are comfortable, don't have too much hiss during transparency mode, and sound good, I will likely be going with those and returning the Max. My experience with the HX say the H95 will likely be plenty comfortable and will sound great. The hiss will be the dealbreaker if the H95 does not improve on the HX's performance.
Another option I am seriously considering is purchasing something like the Sony XM4's on a sale ($<280) and then getting something like the Drop HD6XX paired with a Schit modi magni stack. That would not be super far off APM with AppleCare and case and have decent on the go headphones with a kick ass setup at home.
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